Watch surveillance footage of DA investigator Peter Rauch showing off his department-issued gun at Twin Trees Too March 20, 2017. Two-and-a-half hours later, he struck pedestrian Seth Collier as the 18-year-old was walking home from work. Collier died two days later from his injuries.

Watch surveillance footage of DA investigator Peter Rauch showing off his department-issued gun at Twin Trees Too March 20, 2017. Two-and-a-half hours later, he struck pedestrian Seth Collier as the 18-year-old was walking home from work. Collier died two days later from his injuries.

On this week’s episode of Orange Weekly, Syracuse.com’s Nate Mink and Brent Axe breakdown what went wrong in Syracuse football’s embarrassing 63-20 loss to Maryland and preview SU’s big game with No. 1 Clemson at the Carrier Dome. You’ll also hear from Syracuse head coach Dino Babers during ‘”Syracuse Soundbites.”

Amir Anderson and younger sister Nevaeh have made boxing their life, working out at Ray Rinaldi's West Area Athletic and Education Center on the Near West Side of Syracuse. Video by Michael Greenlar and Donna Ditota.

As President Trump escalates the trade war with China, workers in Central New York feel the pinch, not just in the products they buy, but in the products they produce as well. Gutchess Lumber became China's biggest supplier of lumber nearly three decades ago which built up the 5 generation-owned Cortland-based business, but hight tariffs have bitten into their profits bad enough to initiate deep cuts that affect its family of employees. Will it get worse from there?

As President Trump escalates the trade war with China, workers in Central New York feel the pinch, not just in the products they buy, but in the products they produce as well. Gutchess Lumber became China's biggest supplier of lumber nearly three decades ago which built up the 5 generation-owned Cortland-based business, but hight tariffs have bitten into their profits bad enough to initiate deep cuts that affect its family of employees. Will it get worse from there?

Syracuse Police officer Brandon Hanks grew up in the southside and associated police presence as a kid with something negative. He wanted to change that and joined the force, and now gets out of his car often not to enforce laws, but to engage children in a game of basketball in uniform to encourage a better relationship with the community, promote fitness, and and if he's beaten–buy the winner a new pair of sneakers.